Look into Grimmory, the replacement for booklore. Apparently it’s the same maintainers just a fork since the creator of booklore closed it down (no major changes yet, just housekeeping). I’m happy with it.
Personally, I found Kavita and Grimmory far too complex for my use and also very resources hungry. At the end CWA is just perfect for me. Still have to configure my kobo e-reader to use it directly and this will for sure be a game changer from my current solution which consist in converting epub to kepub with kepubify and then put it on a local webserver that I open through kobo web browser.
Update: Kobo sync configured and it's just awesome, just adding book to a shelf and sync the reader as usual and hop, everything downloads and progress updated in cwa.
Kavita is a fast, feature rich, cross platform reading server. Built with the goal of being a full solution for all your reading needs. Setup your own server and share your reading collection with ...
I'm running Kavita. It's been good and tracks your reading progress. The catch is that there's no upload, you have to put your files on the disk and then rescan
I've tried the a number of the ones being mentioned, but the best for me has been Audio bookshelf . It has a good mobile app, allows collections, tries to pull Metadata, offline reading for the apps, etc.
Not yet. I ran Calibre + Calibre Web for a while before I found booklore, and the key thing I wanted from my setup was for things to work. I was experimenting with Booklore as a "new direction," and spent a significant amount of time troubleshooting and fixing various broken things from crashes of the ingestion job due to long file names, failure of metadata being written, OPDS problems, etc. I've been reading some web novels (2000+ chapters) for a while, so I didn't check in with the state of Booklore until recently, and now that I'm coming to the end of my most recent long story, I was going to pick back up in my TBR.
Honestly, I like self-hosting and experimenting, but I do recognize that "bleeding edge" isn't always compatible with having a relaxing experience. In this case, I want to go back to "easy," rather than "clever," or "new."
irmadlad
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •bilbaobun
Als Antwort auf irmadlad • • •irmadlad
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •CalibreWeb 🐳⚠️ - theme.park Docs
docs.theme-park.devUndulyUnruly
Als Antwort auf irmadlad • • •irmadlad
Als Antwort auf UndulyUnruly • • •shawn
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •Introduction | Komga
komga.orgloanrangerofpeanuts
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •mögen das
TVA mag das.
Otter
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •Did you try Calibre Web or Calibre Web Automated
Maybe CWA is what you're looking for?
github.com/crocodilestick/Cali…
GitHub - crocodilestick/Calibre-Web-Automated: Calibre-Web but Automated and with tons of New Features! Fully automate and simplify your eBook set up!
GitHubgedaliyah
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •Calibre Web Automated is a completely different project. I am liking it so far.
Some people have also suggested Kavita.
GitHub - crocodilestick/Calibre-Web-Automated: Calibre-Web but Automated and with tons of New Features! Fully automate and simplify your eBook set up!
GitHubfievel
Als Antwort auf gedaliyah • • •Personally, I found Kavita and Grimmory far too complex for my use and also very resources hungry.
At the end CWA is just perfect for me. Still have to configure my kobo e-reader to use it directly and this will for sure be a game changer from my current solution which consist in converting epub to kepub with kepubify and then put it on a local webserver that I open through kobo web browser.
Update: Kobo sync configured and it's just awesome, just adding book to a shelf and sync the reader as usual and hop, everything downloads and progress updated in cwa.
MagnificentSteiner
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •GitHub - Kareadita/Kavita: Kavita is a fast, feature rich, cross platform reading server. Built with the goal of being a full solution for all your reading needs. Setup your own server and share your reading collection with your friends and family.
GitHubthirdBreakfast
Als Antwort auf MagnificentSteiner • • •ragingHungryPanda
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •jacksilver
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •AudioBookshelf
www.audiobookshelf.orgbilbaobun
Als Antwort auf jacksilver • • •jacksilver
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •Biggest issue is the folder/book structure is very opinionated and isn't the easiest to work with.
WandowsVista
Als Antwort auf jacksilver • • •utjebe
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •BookLore github.com/mvanhorn/booklore/
Killer feature for me was ability to upload books via web.
Edit: just noticed I linked wrong git, thanks @GeekyOnion@lemmy.world
old.reddit.com/r/selfhosted/co… wtf...
I guess I'm looking for a new service now as well
Booklore is gone.
Joloxx_9 (reddit)GeekyOnion
Als Antwort auf utjebe • • •bilbaobun
Als Antwort auf GeekyOnion • • •GeekyOnion
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •Not yet. I ran Calibre + Calibre Web for a while before I found booklore, and the key thing I wanted from my setup was for things to work. I was experimenting with Booklore as a "new direction," and spent a significant amount of time troubleshooting and fixing various broken things from crashes of the ingestion job due to long file names, failure of metadata being written, OPDS problems, etc. I've been reading some web novels (2000+ chapters) for a while, so I didn't check in with the state of Booklore until recently, and now that I'm coming to the end of my most recent long story, I was going to pick back up in my TBR.
Honestly, I like self-hosting and experimenting, but I do recognize that "bleeding edge" isn't always compatible with having a relaxing experience. In this case, I want to go back to "easy," rather than "clever," or "new."
zeitverschreib ⁂
Als Antwort auf utjebe • •@utjebe
Audiobookshelf has that option as well.
@bilbaobun
Selfhosted hat dies geteilt.
bilbaobun
Als Antwort auf utjebe • • •CaffeinatedCubits
Als Antwort auf bilbaobun • • •